
Winter Japan, snow, onsen and light
One westbound line from Tokyo's clearest air into the snow country and down to the hush of Kyoto — read the way the people who love a Japanese winter read it, where the cold isn't the price of the trip but the instrument the whole season is played on
Last verified: 2026-06-23
Who this plan suits
- First tripWorks well
- Been beforeGreat fit
- With kidsWorks well
- SoloGreat fit
- As a coupleGreat fit
- Gentle paceNot the focus
Late January into February is the deep-winter heart — the snow monkeys soak, the snow gardens lie laden, the great snow festivals peak, and Mount Fuji is at its clearest. Early December has the illuminations at full blaze with less snow. I'd plan around the first days of January (when much of the country closes for its own New Year, though the shrines are the experience then) and mid-February's Lunar New Year week, when inbound crowds swell.
Most people file winter under 'off-season' — the consolation prize for missing the cherry blossoms, a few cold weeks to be endured rather than chosen. I'd gently turn that around, because the people who love a Japanese winter most see it the other way: this is the season the country composes most deliberately. Japan rarely tries to escape the cold in winter; it keeps the cold in the frame so the warmth can be felt against it. You sit in a steaming bath precisely so the snow can fall on your shoulders; gardeners dress a pine in ropes so the snow has something beautiful to land on; a thousand lamps are strung up because the night is long. The cold isn't the price of the trip — it's the instrument the whole season is played on. Once you see winter that way, it stops being a lesser spring and becomes its own clear, quiet, deliberate thing.
So the first thing I'd do is hold your dates against the season. Coming in early December? The cities are at the height of their illuminations and the air is already turning clear, with the deep snow only just starting up north and the holiday crowds not yet arrived — a bright, gentle on-ramp to winter. Coming late January into February? That's the deep-winter heart of this plan: the snow monkeys actually soak, the snow gardens lie laden, the great snow festivals peak, and the dry air gives the clearest, most reliable Mount Fuji of the whole year. Worried winter just means grey and bare? What you trade is real — no blossom, short days, genuine cold — but what comes back is the country at its clearest and quietest: an empty temple at dawn, snow on an old roof, the whole landscape looking freshly rinsed. Two stretches I'd simply plan around rather than through: the first days of January, when much of the country closes for its own New Year (the shrines, as you'll see, are the experience then), and the mid-February Lunar New Year week, when inbound crowds swell again.
I'd thread the trip along a single westbound rail line — out of Tokyo's bright clear winter, up into the snow country of the Japan Alps, then down toward the hush of Kyoto — so each day turns the same idea another way. As ever, this is only how I'd move; pull it apart and rebuild it around your own dates and the kind of cold you're chasing.
Where to base yourself
This is a trip strung on a single line — Tokyo, then a hot-spring town in the Nagano mountains, then Kanazawa and Kyoto — and in winter when you step out the door matters as much as where you sleep. Two of the season's loveliest sights are gated by the hour: the clearest Mount Fuji burns off by mid-morning, and snow on a temple roof can be gone by noon.
In Tokyo, I'd base on or near the JR Yamanote loop — around Tokyo Station, Shinjuku or Shibuya — so the winter illuminations and an early Fuji-lookout are all a short ride away, and the airport links are easy. (More on the illuminations in Day 1.)
Up in the snow country, the whole point is to sleep where the snow falls. The little hot-spring towns nearest the snow monkeys — Shibu and Yudanaka Onsen — are where I'd spend the trip's keystone night, in a ryokan with an outdoor bath, so you can do by choice what the monkeys do by instinct. (Neither town has a WMJS guide yet, so I'm naming them honestly rather than linking them.)
In Kanazawa, anywhere near the station or the Kenrokuen side keeps the garden and the market within an easy walk. In Kyoto, near the station for the simplest hops, or in Higashiyama to wake among the eastern temples and reach them before the day warms.
The move that matters all winter is layers and an early alarm. Cold, dry, bright mornings are the gift of the season — Fuji at its sharpest, a temple garden to yourself, the snow still clean — and they all belong to whoever is out first.
Getting around & tickets
Sort an IC card first — a prepaid tap card (Suica, ICOCA and the rest are interoperable nationwide) — and the cities mostly stop asking you for tickets: tap on and off the local trains, subways and buses. Two winter caveats, both in the fact box: a single tap has to begin and end inside the same IC area, and the card won't carry you onto a Shinkansen or limited express — those need their own ticket.
The spine of this trip is the Hokuriku Shinkansen, and the lovely thing about it is that it runs as one continuous line heading west: Tokyo to Nagano (for the snow monkeys), then the same line on to Kanazawa, with no doubling back. The fastest trains carry no non-reserved seats at all, so I'd book a seat — details in the fact box.
One current catch worth knowing for the last leg. Getting from Kanazawa down to Kyoto used to be a single train; since the line was extended in 2024 it isn't anymore. You now ride the Hokuriku Shinkansen to Tsuruga and change there — same station, a short signposted walk across — onto a limited express into Kyoto. It's one easy transfer, but plenty of older guides still describe a through train, so it's worth knowing before you reach the platform (fact box).
And the winter-specific part: the mountain legs are not the tap-and-go of central Tokyo. The bus up toward the snow monkeys can want cash on weekdays, and the very last stretch to the monkeys is on foot — a snowy uphill walk no vehicle covers (Day 2). More broadly, heavy snow can slow even the Shinkansen now and then, so on a multi-city winter route I'd leave a little slack in each day rather than chain tight connections. Boots with grip, layers you can peel off indoors, and something for the dry air will quietly make or break the trip.
Tokyo, the clear cold and the long night

I'd open in Tokyo, on the two gifts winter quietly hands the city: clarity and darkness. The same cold, dry winds that make the season feel sharp also scrub the air clean, so winter — not summer — is when Mount Fuji shows itself most reliably, often visible right from the city's high points if you look before the morning hazes over. And because the nights are long, Tokyo answers them the way it does best, stringing whole avenues with light. So the day runs from a clear-air morning to a lit-up evening, with the warmth of the city's winter food in between. Nothing here is compulsory; the pleasure is simply that winter shows you a crisper, brighter Tokyo than any other season.
- Early morningA clear-air start, and maybe FujiWinter mornings are the season's clearest, so if the sky's out I'd start high — an observation deck or a west-facing rise — for the chance of Mount Fuji on the horizon before the air softens (the why, with the seasonal odds, is in the fact box). If you'd rather begin gently, Meiji Jingu's evergreen forest is at its stillest in the bare months, a calm first hour just off Harajuku. Linked guide: Meiji Jingu.
- If you're here for the New YearHatsumode, the first shrine visitShould your trip fall in the first days of January, the city is doing something specific and lovely: hatsumode, the year's first visit to a shrine or temple. There's no membership and no wrong way to take part — you join the slow, good-natured shuffle to the offering box, drop a coin, bow, and wish for the year. Meiji Jingu and Senso-ji draw enormous crowds; a smaller neighbourhood shrine gives the same welcome with room to breathe. What's open and what's shut over New Year is in the fact box.
- AfternoonA winter temple, or the warm indoorsThe cold is a fine excuse for the things that reward sitting and looking — a garden in its bare, structural winter dress, or the warm indoors of a museum. Or carry into the old east of the city: Senso-ji at Asakusa feels bracing and far less crowded in the cold, the incense smoke hanging in the chill. Linked guide: Senso-ji.
- EveningThe avenues of lightAfter dark, the illuminations — the city's whole-hearted answer to the long night. Marunouchi's main avenue glows champagne-gold from late autumn deep into February, which makes it the dependable one for a deep-winter trip; the Roppongi slope frames its lights against a floodlit Tokyo Tower, though only into late December; the Meguro River runs pink along the water. It's a warm, slow way to close the first day (the windows are in the fact box, since the December-only displays won't be lit later in winter). Tokyo's illuminations have no WMJS guide yet.
North to the snow monkeys, and a bath in the snow

This is the day the whole idea steps out of the abstract, because you watch a wild animal do exactly what you'll do that night. I'd take the bullet train north into the Nagano mountains, climb the last snowy stretch on foot to the hot-spring valley where the macaques bathe, then go to ground in an onsen town — sitting in hot water with snow on the air, the human version of the same ancient logic. Stay warm by keeping the cold in view: monkey and guest, the same instinct, a few hours apart.
- MorningHokuriku Shinkansen into the snowFrom Tokyo the Hokuriku Shinkansen runs up to Nagano in well under two hours — the fastest trains have no unreserved seats, so I'd book ahead (fact box). Nagano's own great temple, Zenko-ji, is a short ride from the station if you want it (no WMJS guide yet); otherwise press on toward the monkeys while the morning's still young.
- MiddayThe last stretch on footFrom Nagano you reach the monkeys by a local train or an express bus, and then — there's no way around this, and it's part of the charm — a fair walk uphill through snowy forest to the park itself (the walk time, and the cash-on-the-bus caveat, are in the fact box). It's a snowy slope, so boots with grip earn their place. Going in the morning gets you ahead of the early-afternoon tour crowds. Linked guide: Jigokudani snow monkeys.
- AfternoonJigokudani — the monkeys in the bathAt Jigokudani Yaen-koen the wild Japanese macaques climb into a hot-spring pool to warm up — but only in winter, when it's genuinely cold enough, so it's a cold-day reward rather than a year-round certainty. The bath is theirs; the joy is in watching, not joining (and joining isn't permitted). Sitting in the steam watching a snow-dusted monkey doze is, I think, the single clearest picture of what this whole trip is about. Linked guide: Jigokudani snow monkeys.
- EveningYour own snow-viewing bathThen down to a hot-spring town nearby — Shibu or Yudanaka — for the night, and an outdoor rotenburo: hot water, freezing air, snow drifting onto your shoulders. The contrast is the entire point, a habit old enough to have its own name, yukimi-buro, the snow-viewing bath. You'll have spent the afternoon watching the monkeys do it; now it's your turn. (These onsen towns have no WMJS guide yet.)
Kanazawa, the garden built for snow

Day three carries the same line west — the Hokuriku Shinkansen runs straight on from Nagano to Kanazawa, no backtracking — into a city that makes the whole through-line visible in a single place. Of Japan's three great gardens, each was long ago assigned one beauty to embody, and Kanazawa's Kenrokuen was given snow. Everything about it is built to wear the heavy snow of the Japan-Sea coast beautifully rather than merely survive it — which is the national attitude to winter, set in one garden.
- MorningWest to KanazawaThe same Shinkansen carries on to Kanazawa in about an hour (fact box). It's a compact, walkable city, so I'd drop bags and make for the garden while the light is good. Linked guide: Kanazawa.
- MiddayKenrokuen and the yukitsuriIn Kenrokuen the pines stand under yukitsuri — elegant cones of rope rigged from tall poles, raised every autumn so the branches can carry deep snow without breaking. They protect the trees, yes, but the gardeners made the protection a sculpture, and under fresh snow the whole garden reads as composed rather than endured. The Kotojitoro lantern by the pond is the picture everyone knows; the ropes are the reason to come in winter (admission and the rope-season window in the fact box). Linked guide: Kanazawa.
- AfternoonTea houses and the old townA short walk away, the old geisha and samurai quarters the Kanazawa guide covers — the Higashi Chaya teahouse lanes, the earthen-walled streets — are at their quietest under winter light. Gold leaf is the city's craft; a cup of tea dusted with it is a warm, only-here pause out of the cold.
- EveningWinter crab at the marketKanazawa's winter table is built on the same cold Japan Sea whose snow loads the garden's pines — one cold sea, answered twice. Its prize is snow crab, landed only in the winter months and shown off at Omicho Market — boiled, grilled, or as sashimi. A warm, generous end to a cold day (which crab is in season depends on the month — see the fact box).
Kyoto, the hush

The trip ends where winter is quietest. After one easy change of trains down to Kyoto, you arrive in a city that in the cold months becomes a different, stiller place than the one the spring crowds know. This is the trade made plain: you gave up the cherry blossom, and what you got back is the empty temple, the clean cold light, and — if the sky is kind — the rarest sight of all, snow on gold.
- MorningDown to Kyoto, one change at TsurugaFrom Kanazawa it's the Hokuriku Shinkansen to Tsuruga and a single short change onto a limited express into Kyoto — about a couple of hours all in (fact box). Older guides may promise a through train; this is the current way, and it's painless.
- MiddayA temple with room to breatheWinter is when Kyoto's great sights hand themselves back to you. The Kiyomizu-dera hillside and the lanes of Gion, shoulder-to-shoulder in spring, are calm and clear-aired in the cold; the same stones, a wholly different city — bundled up, it's a slow, easy walk. Linked guides: Kiyomizu-dera, Gion.
- If the forecast turns whiteSnow on the Golden PavilionSnow settling on Kinkaku-ji, the Golden Pavilion — gold roof under white, doubled in the pond — is one of the most coveted sights in the country, and it happens only a handful of mornings a year and is usually gone by midday. It's pure luck, never a promise. But if you wake to snow in the forecast, I'd drop whatever the plan said and go early; the reward goes to whoever moves fast. Linked guide: Kinkaku-ji.
- EveningSomething warm, slowlyEnd on Kyoto's winter comfort: yudofu, silken tofu simmered at the table, or a bowl of something hot by the Kamo. After four days of keeping the cold in view, the warmth lands all the harder — which was the whole idea.
If you have one more day
+1 dayTo go deeper into winter, you turn north — the season only grows more itself the further up the country you push.
Into Hokkaido. The far north is winter at full volume: the Sapporo Snow Festival fills a downtown park with carved-ice palaces in early February, Otaru's canal glows under the Snow Light Path, Niseko has the powder snow skiers cross the world for, and out east the sea itself freezes into drift ice off Abashiri. It folds straight onto the Hokkaido plan, whose winter fork is built for exactly this; Hakodate is the natural hand-off by Shinkansen.
The Japan-Sea snow country. Closer in, two sights distil winter to an image. Ginzan Onsen in Yamagata is a Taisho-era street of wooden inns where gas lamps glow on the snow after dark — so loved now that winter evenings are capped and ticketed, which means it rewards planning ahead (fact box). And at Zao, the firs on the ridge freeze solid into rime-ice 'snow monsters' (juhyo), reached by ropeway and lit at night. (Neither has a WMJS guide yet.)
Shirakawa-go in the snow. The steep thatched roofs of the Shirakawa-go farmhouses were shaped to shed exactly this snow, and on a few set evenings each winter the village is lit after dark — a sight so sought-after it is now reservation-only, with no same-day entry (fact box). It pairs with Takayama and the Chubu plan.
If you're short a day
−1 dayShort on time, winter keeps its whole heart in two or three days: one lit Tokyo evening and one snow-onsen day. If the Nagano monkeys are a stretch, the gentlest version swaps in Hakone — an easy hot-spring run from Shinjuku on the Romancecar (fact box), with its own outdoor baths and, on a clear winter day, Mount Fuji across the water. Pair that with a Tokyo illumination night and you've caught the season's two halves — the clear cold and the warm answer to it — without a single rushed connection. Winter rewards being fully present in one warm place far more than chasing five cold ones.
Extend from here
OnwardThis whole trip is really the Kanto, Chubu and Kansai routes wearing their winter coats — the same cities and line, led by the cold — so it folds into a fuller loop whenever you want more days. If you'd rather meet winter without the snow, turn the other way: south to Beppu, where Kyushu's steaming 'hells' make hot water the town's daily weather. And winter brings the clearest Mount Fuji of the year, if seeing it is high on your list. This plan also has siblings in other seasons — the cherry-blossom trip and the autumn-leaves trip read the same country as the year turns.
Good to know — fares & times
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Mount Fuji
Combine with another plan
Tokyo & around, an easy few days
The capital and its day trips — old-city Tokyo, seaside Kamakura, mountain Nikko — at a comfortable pace
Kansai, an easy few days
Japan's older heart — Kyoto, Nara, Osaka — at a comfortable pace
Chubu & the Japan Alps, a slower few days
Mountains and old towns — Matsumoto, Takayama, Shirakawa-go, Kanazawa — at a reserve-ahead pace
Hokkaido, an easy few days
Japan's frontier north — Sapporo and Otaru, the lavender hills or the snow, the steaming onsen valleys, and Hakodate — at an unhurried, season-led pace
Sources
- JR-West (official) — Hokuriku Shinkansen line (Nagano-Kanazawa, Tokyo-Kanazawa 2h28)
- JR-West (official) — Hokuriku one-way ticket (the post-2024 Kanazawa-Tsuruga-Kyoto routing)
- JR-Central (official) — Tokaido Shinkansen to Kyoto (the simple direct version)
- Smart-EX (JR-Central / JR-West official) — Shinkansen booking & fares
- Odakyu Railway (official) — Romancecar to Hakone
- JNTO (official) — IC travel cards (interoperability & limits)
- JNTO (official) — New Year in Japan (closures, hatsumode)
- JNTO (official) — Zao Juhyo (snow monsters) Festival
- Jigokudani Yaen-koen (official) — access to the Snow Monkey Park
- Jigokudani Yaen-koen (official) — winter hours, admission, why the monkeys bathe
- VISIT KANAZAWA (official) — Kenrokuen, yukitsuri and winter hours
- HOKKAIDO LOVE! (official Hokkaido tourism) — Sapporo Snow Festival
- Sapporo Snow Festival (official)
- Shirakawa-go winter light-up — Tourist Association (via japan-guide.com)
- japan-guide.com — Nagano & the Hokuriku Shinkansen (Tokyo-Nagano)
- japan-guide.com — Tokyo winter illuminations (windows by display)
- japan-guide.com — when to travel (winter tradeoffs, snow in the cities)
- LIVE JAPAN — Mount Fuji visibility by season
- LIVE JAPAN — Ginzan Onsen winter day-trip rules
- Japan Experience — the best rotenburo in winter (yukimi-buro)
- In-Kanazawa — Kanazawa winter snow crab (kano-gani / kobako-gani at Omicho)